Friday, October 3, 2014

Interview with Clifford Toler, Part Two

Charlotte Whitford (CW), Diccie Ipock (DI), Marilyn Jones and Victor T. Jones Jr. (VJ) visited with Clifford Toler (CT) one Saturday afternoon in September or October (the week before Homecoming at New Haven Church) in the early to mid-1980s. Based on internal evidence, the interview occurred between 1979 and 1988, and probably before 1985, as I believe I was in High School at the time. The interview below is transcribed from a cassette tape in my possession (Victor T. Jones, Jr). The batteries in the cassette recorder were dying, and the resulting audio plays back faster than normal. Charlotte Whitford may have another cassette of the interview from her recorder. That copy may include information missing from my copy.

Between the two sides of the cassette, much conversation had taken place, as I didn't hear the recorder stop in time to flip the cassette. Side one ends mid thought on the Norman family, and side two begins mid sentence on a land transaction. Presented below is the transcript of the cassette. Sometimes several conversations were going on at the same time. The transcription below follows the main conversation with Mr. Clifford, and at times is edited for clarity. For example,  not every "um" and "er" is recorded, nor is every repetition of some of the facts. False starts when answering or asking questions, when the speaker is trying to gather his or her thoughts, are omitted many times. In some places, the audio is very faint, especially when Diccie Ipock is speaking, and such places are indicated by [inaudible].

Some facts are correct, others are not, so the information is presented with that caveat. For example, research indicates James Toler (Sr.) is the father of James, Charles, Amariah, Stephen and William, not Daniel, as indicated by Mr. Clifford.

Mr. Clifford Toler was born in 1903 and died in 1991. He lived in Willis Neck at the sharp curve on Willis Neck Road. During the interview, his wife (Nona Lee Toler, NT) and son (Clifford Toler Jr.—CTJr) made an appearance.

[Begin Side Two. Some conversation is missing between Sides One and Two.]

CT: There was 56 acres in that plot of land that Granddaddy bought from Uncle Henry Wetherington. He first married Alicia Ann Whitford. That was his first wife, Alicia Ann Whitford. And they had one daughter, And her name was Ann. They called her Ann, Ann Whitford. She's buried over there at Pine Tree Cemetery.

CW: I've seen her gravestone.

CT: Ann Whitford.

CW: Ann Wetherington.

CT: Ann Wetherington, that's right, but her mother was Alicia Ann Whitford. And she was daughter of David P. Whitford.

CW:  We've got that. That's in our Whitford family history book.

CT: Well Uncle Henry sold that place out to my Granddaddy Isaiah and moved way up there, you all know where Uncle Henry lived.

CW: Where was that place he sold to your Granddaddy Isaiah?

CT: Down there on James Swamp, and that was a John Hill Patent, but David P. Whitford had bought it off the John Hill Patent and Uncle Henry Wetherington bought it from David P. Whitford, and my Granddaddy bought it from Henry Wetherington.

CW: He bought it from David.

CT: No it was given to him. David P. Whitford gave it to his daughter Alicia Ann. She married Henry Wetherington.

DI: Was that the same Henry Wetherington that married Aunt Laura?

CT: The very same one. She was his second wife.

DI: Well I thought he married Uncle Louis' sister the first time.

CT: No, he married Alicia Ann Whitford.

DI: And that was Mrs. Susan's mother and daddy.

CW: I don't know. The one he was talking about there were two there was a Wetherington that married twice.

CT: He married Uncle Bill Toler's daughter, Laura.

DI: Well I thought the first time he married Uncle Amariah and Uncle Louis and all them's sister.

CT: No, she was Alicia Ann Whitford. Well that's how come old man Henry rid that property that my Granddaddy bought from him. But it was a draw, or a division of the John Hill Patent. John Hill owned everything from James Swamp right on up to Hill's Neck.

CW: Hill's Neck, that's where Hill's Neck came from.

CT: That's right. John Hill. Hill's Neck.

CW: Did you all know that?

CT: There it is. It was John Hill.

CW: And he got that land...he was just granted all that land. He didn't buy it.

CT: Way back there in them days after New Bern was settled and got a court house there all you had to do was go stake off your claim and go there and file it on record and pay your taxes on it.

CW: And that's how he got it, John Hill. That's why they call it the John Hill Patent.

CT: Yeah. The John Hill Patent. It was patent land. All you had to do was stake off your claim and that's all there was to it. There was land here. Everybody had plenty of land. All them old folks back yonder had more land than they even wanted, they couldn't walk over it, some of them.

CW: What was the name of the school you went to?

CT: I don't know what the name of the school was, but the church was called Friendship.

CW: I bet it was called the same.

CT: Friendship School. I think I've always known it as Friendship School.

CW: Do you remember a grave yard being up there being near Friendship Church?

DI: [inaudible]

CT: Where was that cemetery?

DI: Somewhere close to Friendship Church. They said Mr. Dave Whitford would stop and clean it off sometimes. He sold fish....

CT: Do you know who was buried there?

DI: No, I don't have no idea. I didn't know there was one there.

CW: You can't tell there's one there now.

CT: Was it on this side of Deep Branch, or the east side?

DI: It was right close to the church.

CT: Well it was on the west side.

CW: It must not have been very big. Weyerhaeuser has cleared that up and if there was a cemetery there you can't tell it now, because I have looked. That's why I asked.

DI: I don't think there were very many graves.

CW: It must not have been very big at all. And no tombstones.

CT: [inaudible] I never knew. I went to that church from the time, Lord, I couldn't walk. Daddy used to take me in his arms. All those folks across the creek over there used to go to that church. And all on the north side of the creek went to that church, out there at Friendship Church. Used to be so many people there. After Uncle Amariah's Duff, Duffy, after he got to be a preacher about 18 years old he was converted and went to preaching. He come up there served that church time after time. He'd maybe preach there a couple of years and go off and someone would say "I want Duff back" so they'd get Duff back. I was a little boy growing up but my daddy would tote me there to preaching.

CW: Do you remember if they had an organ or any way to play music?

CT: Oh, they had an organ, and later on they had a piano. Her granddaddy was deacon of that church, Uncle Bill Stilley, and her daddy, Joshua Stilley, he wasn't a deacon, but your granddaddy was, Uncle Bill.

DI: I know he was a deacon at ... [inaudible]

CT: He was a deacon over there? ... I know that Bill Stilley was a deacon there, I was old enough to know that for sure. You know, Diccie, it was mighty bad. That church busted all up, you know. They had, like they do in a lot of churches, like they do in our church out here. The convention there and nobody knew what the trouble. It was all started over a Christmas Program, that a school teacher...now they used to teach school there in the school house on the other side of the creek, right there where the Caton Road is, used to be a school house there. And all on that side of the creek went to that schoolhouse and all on this side went to the school house I was telling you about, and later on they built a new one near Leon and Dezelle. But, the church was there long before that new school house was built on the north side of the creek. Yeah, there came a teacher out there and she wanted a program, a Christmas program. And there was some objection but she said, "Why, there's no need of that" and I don't think she ever had any idea that it was going to bust up the church. And so they kept on, and Christmas come, and somebody put a Christmas tree in there and it did some people so bad that the church broke up and they know it. Diccie, did they ever preach any more at that church?

DI: I don't know. They said it busted up and some pulled up and went over there close home.

CT: They didn't build them a church. I think that crowd over here started going to Kitt Swamp and out here at Macedonia.

CW: And it was over the fact that they didn't think they should have a Christmas program or a Christmas tree in the church. Was that what it amounted to?

CT: That's what it was. It wasn't nothing, there was never no ... Look the thing died just like it started. ...Nobody ever knew. Somebody insulted somebody...

CW: Do you ever remember anybody who played the organ or the piano

CT: I remember at first along, they didn't have either in the church. Her uncle Jesse Stilley sung tenor, I don't know [inaudible]...singing in the choir and by and by they got an organ. And Ira Whitford, your husband's daddy, played the organ.

CW: I had heard he played somewhere or another.

CT: He played that organ for years and years and years. And he had a brother named Robert. He was a straight church man, as I had ever seen. He was Rodman's and them boys' daddy.

CW: How about John Whitford.

CT: John...he went there to church too. He married a Stapleford, Blanche Stapleford.

CW: Well, I hope that ya'll can go to Homecoming...it's not tomorrow, but Sunday week.

CT: We will if we can. Later on though they did away with the organ, it wore out. And they done away with that organ and got a piano, and then some of the younger folks then took over the music, piano playing. But before they got rid of that organ, Bill, Uncle Pitt's youngest son, Bill. He married Nan Ipock from Asbury. She played the organ until the organ finally got to where they couldn't play and they got a piano. I believe Andrew Whitford's daughter played that piano, Nita, she played that piano.

CW: Do you know how in the world Mr. Bill Toler got up with Miss Nan Ipock?

CT: She was teaching school. They built school house there, a nice school house out there. And she taught school there and they got to courting and got married.

DI: She used to go with ...Didn't Uncle Bill go with Mertie some?

CT: Just a little, messing around a little. She and Oma Gaskins. Is she living?

DI: Yes. Mighty feeble, but she's living.

CW: All those girls...You would call them girls. We call her Omie, Nina, and Beanie all three are living. Mr. Jesse is dead. That was all in that family?

CT: There was Elbert, there was Nina, Naomi, Kate and Angelina.

DI: Angelina died young.

CW: That's where Geneva's daughter, name Angie, got her name from?

CT: Jesse's wife was Angie. Jesse Gaskins. Jesse Gaskins, he had two brothers, Elbert married Cornie Purifoy. Jesse married Angie Price. John Allen he died a young man.

DI: No, not so young, he married...

CT: Did he marry?

DI: Rowena Cayton.

CT: Was that Charlie's daughter?

DI: That was Irving Cayton's sister.

CT: You told it right. I remember that now Diccie. He did married Rowena Cayton. Irving Cayton that married Beanie.

CW: Do you know how Caton got it's name by chance?

CT: Unless it was from ... you know after Louis Caton died away. He had Charlie was the oldest one and he had a brother Henry.

CW: He went to Pamlico County. No he didn't it was on the edge of Pamlico County.

CT: He moved to Kinston and stayed there. He married Lena Stapleford. He went to Kinston and stayed a number of years and then moved back to Olympia in Pamlico County. Well, one of his sons married an Ipock out here, Florence and Kelly Ipock's daughter. Her name was Sandra. And they said

CW: Jack, was it Jack Caton?

CT: Mack, Mack Caton, I think his name was Mack.

CW: I knew that family real well. Well I knew the younger ones real well. The younger ones of Mr. Henry's family.

CT: Now old man Charlie's dead, isn't he. Well, is any of his family live there except Rodman and his wife?

DI: Yes, Durwood lives there.

CT: Does Durwood live there?

CW: He's got a house built out in front of the old house. Nobody lives in the old house.

CT: You asked why did that neighborhood out this way were called Caton, if it didn't get it from that, I don't know, cause I can tell you Louis Caton was an old man, Lord have mercy in this world.

CW: How about Dave Caton.

DI: Dave Caton owned a lot of land

CT: That is the truth!

CW: Who was Dave Caton

DI: I don't know, but Pa bought the cemetery from him

CW: Dave, Old man Dave Caton, he had a son. What was his son's name? I've heard my mama call it.

DI: I don't know.

CW: That land, the Caton field that we have right there by the church. Somewhere Dave Caton is mentioned on one of those deeds

CT: That was the Dave Caton place.

CW: We bought that land from Mr. Bryan Knox's daughter, and her husband. We bought it from Cecil Toler and his wife, who was Mr. Bryan Knox's daughter. And they got it from Mr. Bryan somehow. Mr. Bryan Knox. Does that help you any? That's as far back as I can get.

CT: What, the Dave Caton place? That was not a Knox place...cause Old man Dave Caton lived there way back yonder when my mama was a small girl. I don't know who Dave Caton was, whether he come from Edward or Aurora way, or whether he was raised with these Catons right here. Right straight across that opening over yonder on that big road was the Caton House.

CW: Mrs. Sadie Norman's family came from there.

CT: Sadie, Sadie Norman. There was Alex. What was the other one?

Nona Toler: Noah was their brother.

CT: There was Alex, Noah, Lewis and Tom.

NT: Was Aunt Cora [inaudible]

CT: Alex, her uncle married a Caton. His daughter a Willis.

DI: Dave Caton and his wife is buried at the High Bridge.

CT: Aunt Sarah Jane, Uncle Louis's wife, was a Caton and I think she came from over around Small or Edward or Aurora somewhere and it could have been that this Dave Caton come from that direction too.

CW: Some of the Caton's up there spell their name C-A-T-O-N, Beanie, her husband spells it C-A-Y-T-O-N. Do you know anything about that?

CT: No, it's all the same thing. It's just like Wetherington, some say Witherington, Wetherington, and other ways to spell Wetherington.

CW: The reason ask that, one Sunday at church we were talking about how to spell Caton, outside talking about what to put on those baseball shirts, and Preacher David wanted to know how to spell Caton. I said "C-A-Y-T-O-N." Somebody else said, "No, that's not right, it's C-A-T-O-N" He decided to put CATON on the shirts because it was shorter word and it was cheaper. But I really wonder and on some maps it's written C-A-Y-T-O-N and some C-A-T-O-N.

CT: It's just a matter of the Anglo-Saxon tongue.

CW: Like Purifoy was once Purify.

CT: It's just a matter of the Anglo-Saxon tongue, English tongue. English it's called.  [Omitted about 3 minutes of discussion on the history of the English language and England]

CW: Let me ask you this, you mentioned railroads. There was a railroad up there to Caton by Friendship church, did you say?

CT: Yes, between where her Aunt Lucy lives and old Friendship Church. Well, it isn't over 50 yards from where Lucy lives, that old railroad. It come across the creek from Cool Springs over yonder. From Cool Springs, it came by Bryan Knox's old home, across that swamp, and across there just east of where Lucy and Tom lived, and ran right on up in the backwoods there to where the Whitfords lived back up in there. You know there's a road that passes by Leon Norman's. Well, that's the Whitford road. The Whitfords settled in that part of the country.

CW: That railroad went up that far?

CT: Clear to James' Swamp.

CW: What was the purpose of it?

CT: Logs. Logging. It was a log road. They pulled log cars that they had what the called a skidder with grabs. They hauled the logs with oxen and made a bed, a log bed, along the railroad. And they had a log bed there, and this skidder would be mounted on the railroad. It run the railroad, because it could pull itself up and down. And it had a boom and the grabs, the train then would come along and run to the very last car, back up under it and back up and back up till the very last car next to the water tender where the loci was that pulled the train and they'd load that car, log car, pull up a little bit and load up the next one, pull up a little bit and load the next one. That's what they were doing, logging. Broaddus and Ives Lumber Company come down here right about 1906 or 1907.

CW: That was the Boyce Ives?

CT: Broaddus and Ives Lumber Company. They come around here about 1906 or '07. We were living at the Alfred Tunstall place I was telling you about a while ago.

DI: [inaudible] Won't it Broaddus?

CT: Broaddus and Ives. They came from up Virginia way. My daddy quit farming and went to work with them after they logged out this part of the country they went to Truitt. And that's how come that I spent three years in Truitt, working with Broaddus and Ives Lumber Company. Quit farming and went to work with them.

CW: Did they have a railroad that went to Truitt too?

CT: Oh, yes. They had a railroad track too. They logged this whole place from Truitt, they even logged Broad Creek section. You know where that is? Where all the Dunns and Staplefords used to live. Well they logged that section to. All there back of Ap Purifoys, you were telling me a while ago about this boy that married your kin people. He was a

CW: Fulcher?

CT: No, Caton.

CW: Yeah, Caton.

CW: Where was the Ap Purifoy Place?

CT: Right there, you know the old Purifoy Road it's a hard surface road that goes right on to New Bern. You know where the Truitt Road is? It used to be a dirt road. Ap Purifoy lived right there at the corner. He used to live in big white house there. A two-story white house.

CW: Do you know where Spring Hope Church is?

CT: Yes

CW: Did you live near that?

CT: No, we lived on another Truitt Road that this road I'm talking about the Truitt/Walker Road left where Ap Purifoy's stayed went right on to Broad Creek and up into the Dunn and Stapleford neighborhood. Well now, right there at a place called Truitt, it went west then and come back into Purifoy Road down there where there was another road that went on across Morgans Swamp. Well, I lived on that old Truitt Road. Not but a little ways from the school house. Because the school house sat in the forks of the road.

CW: Yes, daddy went to school there.

CT: Now, Spring Hope Church has been there ever since I can remember. It was there when I was living down there.

CW: I got married in that church. Mine was the second wedding that they can ever figure out that was done in that church.

DI: [inaudible]

CW: Eva Mae, We couldn't ever find any more history of weddings in that church. Because for a long time...that church almost closed. We couldn't find any more recorded weddings. Eva Mae Jones Clark was the first one, and mine was the second. For a long time there, there no service there, maybe only once a month and it was just about gone. And it came up again.

CT: Well, there in that time, that was in 1911, or 12, or 13. Old Truitt School house sat in the forks of Old Truitt Road and Spring Hope Church sat at the foot at the Walker Road. And my Aunt Becky, married Jesse Moore. Well, Jesse Moore and Aunt Becky moved down there and Uncle Jess farmed that land in front of where they lived and he owned a little store over there. And we didn't live, about, I'd say, 200 yards, from them. That was back there in 1911, '12, '13.

DI: That was Lloyd, and Earl and all them's daddy?

CT: His first children were Charlotte, Harvey and Mary.

CW: That's where Mrs. Charlotte Toler.

CT: She was a Moore.

CW: Did you know Mr. King Purifoy?

CT: I've heard of him.

CW: It was right there in Olympia.

CT: What the Old Man, King?

CW: We call it Olympia now but it was in that area you were talking about.

CT: He was your granddaddy's daddy. And Luther, was he was your granddaddy's brother?

CW: Half brother.

CT: Yes, I've heard of him. Cause, the Ipocks. You [Diccie] married Andrew. Well, Ace, his daddy, and his daddy, and his brother Noah lived up there and right around that field was a road that went across Broad Creek. Old man King Purifoy lived in there. Right on Broad Creek. That's where your granddaddy Ed was raised.

CW: Did ya'll use the...when you got sick did you use the doctor over there in Aurora?

CT: No, we went to New Bern.

CW: You [to Diccie] used the one over there.

DI: Dr. Potts in Vanceboro some [inaudible]

CW: Didn't you tell me you knew Mrs. Matt Jones and some of her brothers and uncles.

CT: This Jim, Jim, Cousin Matt's daddy. Jim was son of Daniel. His family was Make. Well, Jim's family was Make, Abe, and Matt. Matt married Tom Jones. Abe married a Jones girl, too. And Make married a girl from Bridgeton. But I can't remember her name.

VJ: Ada

CT: Ada, that's right. She lived down there in Bridgeton. And I don't know Make's boy, I don't know Matt's boy. I only know one of Abe's boys. His name was...what was Abe's son's name that married Kelly Toler's daughter?

DI: Osmond?

CT: Osmond, he married Ella Mae. I don't know Make's boy, but I've heard of them. I don't really know none of Matt's, Abe and Make's sister, Matt, Tom Jones, I don't know of but one of Matt's boys, and I know him well. What was his name, Nona?

DI: Freddie.

CT: Freddie, Freddie. Freddie Jones.

CW: That's his granddaddy.

CT: Is that right.

[Tape ended]

Sunday, April 6, 2014

Interview with Clifford Toler, Part One



Charlotte Whitford (CW), Diccie Ipock (DI), Marilyn Jones and Victor T. Jones Jr. (VJ) visited with Clifford Toler (CT) one Saturday afternoon in September or October (the week before Homecoming at New Haven Church) in the early to mid-1980s. Based on internal evidence, the interview occurred between 1979 and 1988, and probably before 1985, as I believe I was in High School at the time. The interview below is transcribed from a cassette tape in my possession (Victor T. Jones, Jr). The batteries in the cassette recorder were dying, and the resulting audio plays back faster than normal. Charlotte Whitford may have another cassette of the interview from her recorder. That copy may include information missing from my copy.

Between the two sides of the cassette, much conversation had taken place, as I didn't hear the recorder stop in time to flip the cassette. Side one ends mid thought on the Norman family, and side two begins mid sentence on a land transaction. Presented below is the transcript of side one of the cassette, side two will be presented at a later date. 

Sometimes several conversations were going on at the same time. The transcription below follows the main conversation with Mr. Clifford, and at times is edited for clarity. For example, not every "um" and "er" is recorded, nor is every repetition of some of the facts. False starts when answering or asking questions, such as when the speaker is trying to gather his or her thoughts, are omitted many times. In some places, the audio is very faint, especially when Diccie Ipock is speaking, and such places are indicated by [inaudible].

Some facts are correct, others are not, so the information is presented with that caveat. For example, research indicates James Toler (Sr.) is the father of James, Charles, Amariah, Stephen and William, not Daniel, as indicated by Mr. Clifford.

Mr. Clifford Toler was born in 1903 and died in 1991. He lived in the Willis Neck area of Craven County, North Carolina, at the sharp curve on Willis Neck Road. During the interview, his wife (Nona Lee Toler) and son (Clifford Toler Jr.—CTJr) made an appearance.

[Begin Side One]

CW: Alright, we want to...you just start telling us just like we did the other afternoon.

CT: Well, James Toler, James the First. He arrived in America in what is known as the Plymouth Colony up around the north of Virginia just this side, some where about 1740. Now that's just an estimation.

DI: Arrived in America when?

CT: About 18—,  1740.

CW: 1740. In Plymouth Colony, Virginia.

CT: James the First. But, I'm not going to mention his brothers. There was three of them, he had two brothers. One went north into Maryland, and one stayed in Virginia. Now we'll leave off them, I don't even know their names. We'll leave them off and come to James the Second. He was son of James the First. James the Second had three sons, that I know that I've been told by my Granddaddy and Daddy and also Uncle Louis. One was named Daniel, one Mathias...

DI: Mathias? How do you spell that?

CT: M-A-T-H-I-A-S, Isn't that how you spell that.

CT: Well then, and the other one was named Thomas. Well now I'll tell you what became of them. Mathias settled in Pamlico County and moved into Pamlico County sometime after James the First come to Craven County.

CW: That was Mathias went to Pamlico County?

CT: Yeah, Mathias settled in Pamlico County. And Thomas, there's little that I know about him. He must have went back in Virginia, because since then, you need to write that down, because this is something that we all used to guess about. After a long time after New Bern was settled and my daddy got to be a young man they come a man from Virginia, a Toler called Tom, Tom Toler. And he moved to New Bern and settled down and raised a family in New Bern and I have seen his offspring, and talked with them personally. And he had two boys that I've met personally and so Tom probably died in New Bern or went back to Virginia one. He just faded out of everybody's recollection.

DI: Did you know any of his boys?

CT: Yes, his oldest boy was named...Gracious Sake. He used to work a long time ago when I was a young boy down there a grown man at that time, down there at a filling station at the corner of Broad and East Front Street. Now what was his name. I tell you that I've forgot that one, I'll just name the other one that I know, his name was Paxton. P-A-X-T-O-N. Paxton. Well that's the end of that.
            Now, James the Second's three sons was Daniel, Mathias, and Thomas. You've got that down. Alright, now we're going to start where our families come into that family. Daniel had five sons, I don't know anything about Mathias' sons or Thomas' sons, but Ulysses, my brother, you know him, you knew him. He went into Pamlico County one time and was hewing around Pamlico County and run into some of Mathias' offspring, and his name was Bill. Well later on, there was another William Toler and he is some of your offspring, you are of his offspring, William. But we don't get to that right now. Let's get back to Daniel. James the Second had a son named Daniel, Mathias, and Tom. Alright, now let's get back to Daniel's sons. Daniel's sons was James, my great-granddaddy. The next one was Amariah, but I don't know how to spell Amariah.

CW: I can spell that.

CT: You can? Alright call it out. Amariah, Charles, Stephen, and William. I just called his name a while ago. William.

CW: Now James was your...

CT: Great-Granddaddy. Now let's start with James since he was the oldest one, and I'll tell you his sons. James had three sons: Isaiah, Amariah, and Louis. That was Tom and Kelly...Diccie...you remember Uncle Louis don't you?

DI: Yes.

CW: How do you spell his name? L-O-U-I-S or L-E?

CT:  Yes, yes, because I'll tell you how, why that is. We don't spell it L-E-W-I-S because that is Anglo-Saxon and the Tolers were a Germanic Tribe called the Celts. You've heard of all that haven't you. You people have been to school, you've know all about that. Well they had a different language than Anglo Saxon. Anglo-Saxon spoke a little German, but the Celtic tongue was a little bit different. And in Anglo-Saxon Louis is spelled LOUIS and LEWIS but for some reason or another France was settled by the Celts and still are Celts in France in the state of Brittany—you know that little corner of France down in there they call Brittany? Well, its Celtic people there and they are some of the people that my family, they are Germanic people, that my family originate from. So we'll say LOUIS.
And, ah,

DI: Didn't they have some sisters? Amariah, Isaiah, and Uncle Louis didn't they have some sisters?

CT: That was a second marriage.

DI: No, one married Henry Wetherington.

CT: No, that was William Toler.

CW: That's what I've got. William Toler, too. We may not be far enough back.

CT: That was Daniel's sons. Daniel's sons was James, Amariah, Charles, Stephen and William. William was the youngest of that family. Well Isaiah.

CW: We've got James' sons: Isaiah, Amariah and Louis, we've got those.

CT: That's right. We've got to go a little further but I ain't going to tell you my family, because Isaiah didn't have but one boy and that was my daddy, George.

DI: [something inaudible]

CT: That was him.

CW: Had one son...

CT: Isaiah, one son, George. I descended from him.

CW: That was your daddy.

CT: Um-hum. And Uncle Louis, if you want all of them. Do you want all of their names?

CW: Yes, we want all we can get.

CT: Uncle Amariah and I can't remember all of his boys to save my soul. I tried the other night to remember all of Uncle Amariah's boys—he was the next to Granddaddy—Uncle Louis was the baby boy.

DI: Uncle Amariah married someone

CT: Parthene Jones

DI: He married someone before he married Parthene. He married Victoria...[inaudible]

CT: Did he?

DI: ...two children from Mrs. Mary Wetherington, one named John

CT: She was a Wiley

DI: No, [inaudible] ...married John Henry Norman and the other was a boy named John and lived over in Bridgeton and he married ... [inaudible]

CT: You've told me something I never knew that Uncle Amariah was married twice.

DI: I didn't either until right here lately. Mrs. Mary Wetherington...[inaudible]

CT: Well I'm glad you knew that Diccie.

DI: I can find out for certain from Mrs. Mary.

CT:  Alright. Well anyway, the last woman he married was a Jones. What was her first name?

DI: Parthene.

CT: Parthene. Uncle Amariah married Parthene Jones. Well now do you know his sons?

DI: Josh, Duff...

CT: I know there are five or six of them.

CW: Is he the one that had Duff Toler? Was he a preacher?

CT: That was it. Well I declare we'll have to leave off some of them unless you want to put down what me and her can recollect?

CW: Well we do.

DI: I've got all them, or a lot of them anyway.

CT: You have? Some? Well now Uncle Louis' sons were Kelly, Thomas, Seth, Harvey and Jimmy.

DI: And a girl Lizzie.

CT: Lizzie, that was his daughter.

CW: Was she Elizabeth or Lizzie?

DI: They called her Lizzie, but I don't know.

CT:  Well we've got so many to name we'll have to get on with it now. Amariah, his sons, I never knew but one. Did you?

DI: Duff.

CT: Who? Uncle Amariah, my ...we were then on my line. Now we've got to start with Granddaddy Jimmy's brother Amariah. Ain't we? Amariah never had but let's see now...he had one son...two sons: Emmett and Daniel.

DI: Daniel, was he the one who married Aunt Mary Liz?

CT: No, he married Sina. He married Aunt Sina.

CW: Now wait a minute, I'm lost. Are we on James' sons?

DI: Amariah's sons.

CW: Amariah's sons?

CT: Amariah, son of Daniel. Put that down and then you can keep it more straight. Amariah, son of Daniel.

CW: Oh, I've got you.  Now I've got you.

CT: Well he had two sons that I know about. That was Emmett and Daniel. Now we'll go to Charles, son of Daniel. Charles ...have you ever heard of him?

DI:  Yeah.

CT: He lives...That was his old home, the Caton place up there. The Louis Caton place. That was his old home. That was where he settled.

CW: This is the Charles Toler that was on that piece of paper that I gave you all and Diccie's got a copy of it. An old woman from Blount's Creek gave it...

DI: Her name is Anna Rowe.

CW: That Charles Toler was mentioned on that paper. [some inaudible conversation] We've got Charles' because we've got it on that paper.

CT: Well put it right down there and if you want to recopy it you can do it. Charles, son of Daniel ...I can't remember to save my life but one son. He had three or four daughters. One married, you've heard of him, right there where you stay...

CW: Silas

CT: Silas Fulcher. Her name...what is Beanie Cayton's name? I called her Beanie.

DI: Who?

CT: Ervin Cayton's

DI: Verrena...

CT: Beanie

DI: Verrena Carolina, I believe. Verrena anyway.

CT: Well I used called her Beanie.

CW: We still do.

CT: Alright, well Silas Fulcher married Uncle Charles' daughter Beanie. I called her. Old man Alpha used to live down here in the Forest.

CW: Alpha Fulcher.

CT: Alpha Fulcher. And another brother of his lived in Norfolk. His name was Rudolph.

CW: Now that's getting in my family.

CT: It is? Well alright. That was Uncle Charles Toler's daughter Beanie. And he had one son. Well he had another daughter named Melissa. Melissa Caton. She married Louis Caton and that's how come the Caton's there. Melissa Caton was one of Uncle Charles' daughters. And another one was old man Ad Whitford's daughter. They called her Amelia. Old man Ad Whitford. You knew him, too, didn't you? And his other daughter was... her name was Barbara, and she married John Powers. Barbara had a brother named Daniel, and that's the only boy that I can remember Uncle Charles Toler had. Now I might get to thinking seriously and think of another one but I can't...anyway John Powers and Barbara immigrated to Texas way back yonder...you've heard of that hadn't you.

CW: That's on that piece of paper.

DI: I know they've got some...

CT: They immigrated to Texas and Daniel went with them, and there is another family of Tolers in Texas.

CW: Isn't this interesting how all this ties with some of the things we've gotten. And I've...I wish I had thought. We should have brought him a copy of that. I'm going to make...I bet I've got another copy of that at the house. But I want to give you a copy of that. So sometime when I come into the post office I'm going to bring one.

DI: Charles' children?

CT: Yeah...Look Diccie, Cousin Dave had a boy, I think he had three sons, I think, but I don't know his last son because he moved away from down yonder to White Oak River. Well he had a boy named Holloman and while Holloman was on his journey as a young fellow he got into the Navy or Merchant Marines or something or other and anyway he landed down there in Texas. And he already knew about his grandmother's sister being in Texas so he decided to look them up and he did. And after he got out of the Navy if that's what he was in, something like that, he went and stayed with them for years and years and years. Cousin Dave's son, Holloman.

DI: Holloman?

CT: Um-hmm. Alright then that's the end of that family. Now...let's see, we've had James, Amariah and Charles, ain't we?

DI: Now it's Stephen.

CT: Now we go to Stephen, son of Daniel.

DI: Uncle Jim, Uncle Abe, and them.

CT: Right, you know everyone of them? Well the first one's name was Dennis, Dennis, Abe, Abraham, well he was the very last one. Then comes Zach, Redding, and Jim. He had five or six boys.

DI: And two or three girls...

CT: Well I don't remember.

DI: Gus and Ellen.

CW: That was the girls' names?

DI: {inaudible}

CT: There was one that went married a Lewis and lived way down yonder South River way, Adams Creek. What was her name? Well one of them, didn't one of them marry John Purifoy?

CW: What?! That's mine!

CT: John Purifoy. Did you know old man John Purifoy?

CW: Not yet, I don't.

CT: Well he's dead. Long ago, long ago.

CW: Now who was it married John Purifoy?

CT: Well now what was her name?

VJ: Jane.

CW: Jane.

CT: Jane! That's right. That boy's got it. Right there. Jane was her name. I've got to where now I can't remember things as good as I used too, but that was her name.

CW: I tell you one thing. My memory is not like yours at my age right now.

DI: Was there one named Betty?

CT: Betty? That's the one that married Lewis and moved to Adams Creek...South River way down there.

DI: Then there's Emmeline? She's the one married John Walker. Which one married John Purifoy?

VJ: Jane.

CT: And there was one that was never married. Her name was Augusta.

CW: She didn't get married. You know what somebody told me? They said if you look far enough back you'll find you've got Toler blood in you. And I do, I'm finding out that I do. I've got Toler blood.

DI: And Ellen didn't get married either.

CT: That's right, Gus and Ellen.

DI: [Inaudible]

CT: No, no. That was an adopted. Her name was Minnie. We'll she was an adopted child.

DI: She was?

CT: Yes. Well, old Uncle Stephen, I call all of them uncle. Old Uncle Stephen's...what was his wife's name?

VJ & DI: Susan.

CT: Susan. Well she was John Purifoy's sister? Wasn't she? Look it up son and see.

DI: I don't know?

CW: He hadn't got the Purifoys. I hadn't got that far back either. I'm a Purifoy. I'm going to get it all while I'm right here.

CT: Well won't she a Purifoy, Diccie?

DI: I don't know.

CW: Let's see. Who's wife did you think was a Purifoy?

CT: Old man Stephen, son of Daniel. I believe she was John Purifoy's , Old Man John Purifoy's sister...old man Arrington's son. There were several of them Purifoys and old man Arrington was the only one I ever heard of anywhere down there. And I know exactly where he lived, but...Do you know anything about where Willie Purifoy used to live?

CW:  Yes. Now that's me section of the woods.

CT: It is? Willie?

CW: I lived further on down the road.

CT: Well Willie's daddy was named...everybody called him Rad. Everybody called Willie's daddy Rad. He was old man Arrington's son. Well old man Arrington had Rad, John, Steve...Steve, and one called Ap. That was old man Arrington's family. Well now we've got Stephen, now. Now we come to William, the youngest one. Did you descend from William, too? O.K.  Now William...now I'll have to think a long time because I think that William married a descendant of the settlers in New Bern.

DI: Barrington...Penny Barrington.

CT: No, she won't a Barrington, was she? Was she a Barrington?

DI: I thought it was Penny Barrington.

CT: Well I've been told that he married an Ebeck, an Ipock they call them now. Penny. Her name was Penny, I know. Well I've been told that she was an Ebeck. Of course you know the German, Swiss and Palatines that settled New Bern they were called, that particular family, in the Swiss language, were called Ebeck. Have you ever heard of that?  Now when the English got through with it, Anglo-Saxon got through with it, they called it Ipock. And I've been told that old Aunt Susan was an Ipock. Are you sure? Am I wrong?

DI: That would be Pa's daddy, wouldn't it? My granddaddy's daddy? William Pitt Toler's daddy?

CT: William Pitt...Yeah.

DI: Well it was Penny Barrington, because it's on the tombstone out there at High Bridge.

CT: Penny Barrington. Alright let's forget about them.

DI: Do you know any Barringtons?

CT: Oh yes, I know some Barringtons used to live right across the highway over there on the old brick road. Old man Jesse Barrington.

CW: I want to get that written down, too. I've got some Barringtons in my family history.

CT: You have? Well, old man Jesse Barrington...I don't know much about him than he used to live across the highway...old brick road over yonder. Do you know where Randolph Cook used to live? Well that was the Barrington place.

DI: You don't know where she come from or nothing?

CT: No I don't. I don't even know his wife or anything? I just know old man Jesse Barrington. Nona Lee remembers him.

CW: Do you remember the Kinsaul place? Now my Grandmother was a Barrington. She was a Mary Barrington and she married a Jones. But her folks came from the Kinsaul place over here. And they were Kinsauls and they came from Pamlico County. Somehow one of those Kinsauls married a Barrington. And I bet that Barrington was from right up there right where those people you were talking about, Jesse Barrington.

CT: I just don't know. They could have been kin, I just don't know.

CW: I bet you one of those Kinsaul girls married. When they came over here.

CT: There's some of those Kinsaul girls alright because one of the married a Fulcher out here called Bryan Fulcher.

CW: That's the ones. We're kin to the Fulchers. You know that Fulcher that was a Holiness Preacher up there in Vanceboro.

CT: Dave?

CW: Well he was kin to my mother.

CT: Well Dave is old man Bryan's son. He had four or five sons. I know every one of them. I can remember them. I used to pal around with some of them.

CW: Did Mr. Bryan Fulcher marry a Barrington?

CT: No he married a Kinsaul.

CW: A Kinsaul. That's right a Kinsaul. I've got that, that's what I needed to know. Now we'll get back to the Tolers. William Toler.

CT: William Toler. Now let's see. William Toler...his sons were Lawrence, Caravasso, Pitt, and Willis. That's all of them, isn't it? [some conversation] Diccie, is that all of William's family?

DI: That's all the boys.

CT: Well I don't know the girls.

DI: There's one girl named Frances Ann, and she married Dave R Dunn. And Aunt Laura...

CT: Laura Wetherington, old man Henry. I know her.

DI: And Mary, she didn't ever get married.

CT: Yes, she did. Mary married a man from Connecticut. No, not Connecticut, a New England state. What was his name?

DI: I don't know, I didn't know that.

CT: Mary Jane? Mary Jane? Who was Mary Jane?

DI: You're talking about Uncle Lawrence's girl.

CT: Yes, I am. Yes, I am. Beg your pardon, Diccie.

DI: Mary, Pa's sister was the first one buried out here at High Bridge.

CT: I am getting off the track fast, that was Uncle Lawrence's daughter.

DI: Yes.

CT: That's right.

DI: This Mary was the first one buried out here at High Bridge.

CW: And she didn't get married?

DI: No, she didn't.

CT: Well now you help them with that for I don't know.

DI:  And then Elizabeth, which is Beanie's mama.

CT: John Gaskins. John Gaskins was raised right across this branch, right over yonder on that hill across this branch. He moved in there not but just a little ways from Uncle Charles Toler. They were the only two families in there at that time...except...

DI: And somebody else...

CT: Huh?

DI:  Didn't somebody raise him?

CT: I don't know. I don't...to tell you the truth I don't even know, because this whole neighborhood is full of Gaskinses but really the Gaskins family is something I don't know too much about. Now. I know from Nona Lee, she, her family, her granddaddy married at first a Gaskins. I think that his name was Adam Gaskins, and I think he fathered the whole Gaskins family that's all around this whole place. They were just everywhere. In fact they owned most all of this land, but that's been a terrible long many years ago now. And there's no Gaskinses live right in here now, but there's plenty of them on the road...[inaudible]...but I don't know much about the Gaskins family. I know some of them, I've seen some of the old ones, but I don't know them. I think they were Adam Gaskins' offspring, Diccie, is what I think. Now, we've got Bill, William, and his sons,

CTJr: There's a William Toler lives in down by Bayboro.

CT: Well, he's some of Mathias' family.

CW: That's what I was thinking. There's a Toler, what's his name? He's in Tideland Electric.

DI: Lee?

CW: Lee Toler, and I bet, he's a, he's a holiness minister down in Alliance, and lives in Alliance.

CT: I know him.

CW: I bet you all those Tolers came from Mathias.

CT: I know him. I know Lee. [inaudible conversation] Yes, they were some of Mathias' family. Mathias, brother to Daniel. Well, let's see...

CW: We're going back to William's children.

CT:  Well Diccie can tell you more about William because she came from that generation...I mean she's kin to them.

CW: Can we go back and see if we can get all their children. Like Lawrence's children and who they are married to and their children.

CT: Well Lawrence, his oldest son was Allen, his grand-great...he descended from Allen. Lawrence was Allen's daddy.

CW: Who was your mother?

CT: My mother? She was Laura Bell Norman.

CW: Was she kin to Mr. Gilbert Norman and all them?

CT: Yes 

[Tape ends. End side one.]

Saturday, January 8, 2011

2010 Toler Deaths

There were quite a few deaths in the Toler family during 2010. Here are some of the ones that I know about:
  1. Violet Marie Toler Beacham died 11 Dec 2010. She married Clifton Beacham and was the daughter of Uriah Blade Toler and Hyacinth Marie Tuten Toler.
  2. Lawrence John Borkowski died 29 Mar 2010. He married Helen Marie Toler in 1950.
  3. Jennifer Leigh Toler Centers died 17 May 2010. She married Jackie Darrell Centers in 1968 and was the daughter of Quentin Randolph Toler and Doris Lee Stilley Toler.
  4. Sandra Faye Woolard Cutler died 27 Mar 2010. She married Larry Cutler in 1959 and was the daughter of Charles Woolard and Edna Irene Toler Woolard.
  5. Vanola Toler Gaskins died 20 May 2010. She married James Randolph Gaskins in 1935 and was the daughter of George Brinson Toler and Charlotte Moore Toler.
  6. Annie Laurie Weston Jones died 7 Oct 2010. She married Ralph O. Jones in 1937.
  7. Terry McCoy Jones died 18 Feb 2010. He was the son of Ralph O. Jones and Annie L. Weston Jones.
  8. Mary Gladys Emory Lewis died 2 Sep 2010. She married Raymond Mayhue Lewis in 1944. Raymond was the son of William Stephen Lewis and Sidney P. Toler Lewis.
  9. Rena Toler Miltenberger died 3 Sep 2010 at the age of 100. She married Del Miltenberger and was the daughter of James Lawrence Toler by his second wife Barbara Jones Edwards Toler.
  10. Lela Pollard Thompson Corby Norris died 15 Feb 2010. She was the daughter of Henry Herman Pollard and Geneva Ethel Toler Pollard.
  11. Violet Marie Toler Patterson died 26 May 2010. She married William Fornes and Herman Patterson and was the daughter of Montague G. Toler and Nora Willis Toler.
  12. Lela Marie Jones Roberson died 9 Jun 2010. She married first James R. Roberson in 1941 and later married his brother, Woodrow Roberson in 1973.
  13. Joseph Lee Rowe died 12 Sep 2010. He was the son of George Allen Rowe and Derita Murel Bland.
  14. Danny Marshall Toler died 9 Feb 2010. He was the son of David Lawrence Toler and Bernice Stilley Toler.
  15. Delcie Marie Cuthrell Toler died 25 Sep 2010. She married Evie Webster Toler Jr in 1944.
  16. Etta May Jenkins Toler died 20 Dec 2010. She married John Hyman Toler in 1939.
  17. Gennell Wayne Toler Jr. died 10 Jun 2010. He was the son of Gennell Wayne Toler and Kay Kilby Toler.
  18. James Daniel Toler died 27 Feb 2010. He was the son of Montague G. Toler and Nora Willis Toler.
  19. Melba E. Stilley Toler died 8 Mar 2010. She married Aubrey Allen Toler in 1940 and was the daughter of Joshua Ivan Stilley and Penny Gray Toler Stilley.
  20. Thaddeus Stampford Toler Jr. died 5 Nov 2010. He was the son of Thaddeus S. Toler and Lela Buck Toler.
  21. William Adderson Toler died 17 Dec 2010. He was the son of Tillman Addison Toler and Delila G. Martin Toler.
  22. William Perry "Bill" Toler died 16 Feb 2010. He was the son of Ulysses G. Toler and Lovie Toler Toler.
Drop me a note if you know of others that I may have missed.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Melba Escoline Stilley Toler, 1923-2010

Melba Escoline Stilley Toler passed away on Monday, March 8, 2010, after more than a 13-year battle with Alzheimer's disease. A graveside service was held at 11 a.m. on March 11, at the High Bridge Cemetery in Caton. Flowers are welcome, but those who prefer are asked to make memorial donations in her memory to Little Swift Creek Fire Department.

Melba was born on May 13, 1923, to Joshua Ivan and Penny Toler Stilley, and spent her entire life in the Caton community. She is predeceased by her husband, Aubrey, and her two children, Rose and Stanley. Surviving are her son and daughter-in-law, Joshua and Mayona Toler of New Bern; her daughter and son-in-law, Gaynelle and Terry Lewis of Caton; her grandchildren, Richard and Tina Toler; Cristy Lewis, and TJ and Mistey Lewis of Caton. She is also survived by two great-grandsons, Randy Toler of Greenville and Eli Lewis of Caton. Also surviving is the best roommate that a girl can have, Bonnie Broome of New Bern. A debt of gratitude is owed to a wonderful care team of nurses who helped make these last years much more enjoyable: Susan, Sandra, Claudia, Theresa and many others - we thank you from the bottom of our hearts.

Melba was a farmer's daughter and was the last surviving of seven wonderful sisters (Delphia Stilley Ipock, Dezelle Stilley Norman, Diccie Stilley Ipock, Delavenia Stilley, Doris Lee Stilley Toler, Melba Stilley Toler and Bernice Stilley Toler).

Melba was a simple woman who loved her family most of all. She was the caretaker of her family and was happiest at her table surrounded by those she loved. She enjoyed gardening and spent many years raising and canning food for her family.

Melba was a small woman with a big heart and never turned her back on anyone she loved. She loved unconditionally and all knew that they were welcome in her home. When you left her home at the end of every visit, you would hear her say, "Come When You Will"... and she meant it with her whole heart. Melba loved children; raised four of her own and was instrumental in raising numerous others throughout the years. Even in the last years of her life, the sound of small children playing made her smile. Melba en-joyed music and during the last few months of her time with us, could be seen with her feet tap-ping to the music. Melba was a Young and the Restless fan and for many years 12:30 p.m. meant time for her "stories."

Although the last decade of her life, she battled Alzheimer's, she still taught us much about life and the power of unconditional love. She reminded each of us how important family truly is. There are things this disease took away from her, but it did not and cannot take away the person she was, the love we shared, or the memories that will remain with us always. God Bless You Sunshine, We Love You.

Arrangements are by Pollock-Best Funerals & Cremations.

[Obituary was written by her granddaughter, Cristy, and published in the Sun Journal on March 11, 2010, with some additions by Victor T. Jones, Jr.]

Monday, August 3, 2009

William Toler Petitions for Road, 1854

State of North Carolina, Craven County, Court of Pleas & Quarter Sessions June Term 1854.

To the Worshipful the Justices of the Court of Pleas & Quarter Sessions for the County of Craven aforesaid.

The petition of William Toler against Sally Ann Morris, John Reel and Shadrach Rowe.

Humbly complaining Sheweth unto your Worships your Petitioner William Toler that he is settled on and cultivating a certain tract or parcel of land situate lying and being in the County of Craven on the South side of Little Swift Creek adjoining the lands of the said John Reel, James Toler Sr. & others to which there is no public road and no way to pass to and from the same without passing over the land of other persons. Your Petitioner admits that there is no necessity for a public road provided he can have the privilege of a private way from the place of his residence and cultivated land aforesaid to the nearest point on some public Road. Your Petitioner further sheweth unto your Worships that there has been for many years (more than twenty-one) a public Cart or Waggon way leading from the residence and cultivated lands of the Petitioner across the lands of the defendants to a Public Road leading from Gaskins' Ferry near New Bern to Coor Point which said public Road is Known as the Bath Road which said Cart or Waggon Way was a great convenience not only to your Petitioner but to the neighborhood generally. But your Petitioner further complaining shows your Worships that the said Sally Ann Morris by and with the Consent of the other defendants have closed and shut up the said Cart or Waggon Way leaving your Petitioner and others entirely without the means of getting out to the Public Road, to Church or any Public Mill. In view of his present condition therefore Your Petitioner prays that your Worships will duly C___din the premesis and if deemed advisable will order a Cart or Waggon Way laid off according to Law leading from his residence and running as nearly as practicable with the Old Cart or Waggin Way aforesaid and with as little injury as possible to the defendants to the Public Road Known as the Bath Road leading from Gaskins Ferry near New Bern to Coor Point and that a Jury may be duly appointed to lay off said Cart or Waggin Way in the best way possible and may be dircated [i.e. directed] to make a Report of their proceedings to this Worshipful Court--that due and proper notice of this application may be given the defendants--that Petitioner may have such other and further relief in the premises as he may require. And in duty bound he will ever pray &c &c

Wm. H. Washington
Sol[icitor] for Petitioner
---
The above petition to the Court was for making a cart way from William Toler's home to the Bath (or Pamlico) Road, passing over the lands of John Reel, Sally Ann Morris and others. The old road passed from near High Bridge, over the current lands of the editor, through the lands of R.W. Stilley heirs, across the lands of G. Jerome Norman heirs, and on to I'm not sure where. Years ago, when I found the petition (1990), I thought the road was the Toler Road (that portion of Aurora Road from New Haven Church to the County Line). In talking with Jerome Norman at the time, he stated that the road actually no longer existed, but parts of it could be seen on his land and on the land of Ran Stilley. Randy Charles Stilley kept part of the mentioned road mowed when he lived in the Philpot Field.

Sunday, July 5, 2009

Rev. Robert "Bobby" Jones

The Rev. Robert “Bobby” Jones, 65, of Emerald Isle, went home to be with the Lord on Wednesday, July 1, 2009, at Carteret General Hospital.

He served in the United States Air Force during the Vietnam War and retired from civil service at Cherry Point after 31 years.

He was ordained as a Free Will Baptist Minister in 1974 and received his doctorate in Theology in 2000.

He was preceded in death by his sister, Ruth Elaine Atwell. He was the son of Glennie and Annis Whitford Jones.

He is survived by his wife of 46 years, Jenny Jones; two sons, Robert “Robby” Jones and Russell “Rusty” Jones; two daughters, Keri Jones Chernivec and Sheri Berry; one brother, William Earl Jones; and six grandchildren, Jennafer Williams, Chris Jones, Alec Jones, Tyler Berry, Zachary Berry and Devin Jones.